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The Verge says Coolfly’s Aura smart bird feeder captures a wider view and has strong battery life, but the app and bird ID features can be uneven.
In short: The Verge reviewed Coolfly’s Aura smart bird feeder and found it practical and good at capturing more bird activity, but less polished than Birdbuddy.
The Verge published a review of the Aura Smart Bird Feeder from Coolfly. It is a bird feeder with a motion-activated camera, so it can take photos and videos when birds land to eat. You watch the clips in a phone app.
The review says the Aura’s wide field of view helps it capture more of what is happening in a backyard. Think of it like using a wide-angle lens on your phone camera, so you see more of the scene at once. The Verge also highlights a large seed container, strong battery life, and a modular design that can be adjusted.
The Aura is listed at $220 at the time of the review, down from $290. The reviewer notes an option for local storage, meaning some videos can be saved on the device instead of being kept on a company server.
Smart bird feeders have become popular because they can identify birds using AI (software that makes educated guesses based on patterns), and they let people see visits they would normally miss. The Verge’s review suggests Coolfly’s Aura could be a good fit for someone who wants more coverage of their yard and fewer charging hassles. But buyers should expect tradeoffs like weaker image quality, inconsistent bird identification, and an app experience that feels messy, plus shorter free recordings and cloud storage.
Source: The Verge AI